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Mork

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 9, 2009
539
34
Since I installed Mac Sierra server three days ago, I've had to restore the entire machine from backup twice.

What happens is I do something like try to start Safari, but it won't start from the dock. About that time, I get a pop-up that says that the MacOS needs to repair my Library so I can run applications.

My login user ID is pre-loaded, but no matter what password I enter (like the one that goes with the login shown), this dialog won't accept it.

Then, to make matters worse, if I reboot, I then get a two field login prompt and no matter what I type in the fields (valid user names) nothing is accepted.

Then, I have to restore the entire machine from a backup if I want to get back in.

Has anyone seen this issue?

TIA

- M
 

guzhogi

macrumors 68040
Aug 31, 2003
3,772
1,891
Wherever my feet take me…
I've seen this (or similar) issue before. I find that it needs an admin user's credentials. It usually comes back a few times. Pressing the Cancel button (or Command-Period) closes this window.
 

Mork

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 9, 2009
539
34
The problem isn't that I can't close the window. And, it won't take the admin password (root) either. The real problem is once you reboot, no passwords work at all.
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,709
7,279
Since I installed Mac Sierra server three days ago, I've had to restore the entire machine from backup twice.

What happens is I do something like try to start Safari, but it won't start from the dock. About that time, I get a pop-up that says that the MacOS needs to repair my Library so I can run applications.

My login user ID is pre-loaded, but no matter what password I enter (like the one that goes with the login shown), this dialog won't accept it.

Then, to make matters worse, if I reboot, I then get a two field login prompt and no matter what I type in the fields (valid user names) nothing is accepted.

Then, I have to restore the entire machine from a backup if I want to get back in.

Has anyone seen this issue?

TIA

- M
I asked this question in the thread where you originally posted this: Are you trying to sign in to the server with an Open Directory or Active Directory account? If so, don't do that; make a local administrator account on the server and sign in with that.
 

Mork

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 9, 2009
539
34
I asked this question in the thread where you originally posted this: Are you trying to sign in to the server with an Open Directory or Active Directory account? If so, don't do that; make a local administrator account on the server and sign in with that.

I tried to log in to the Mac with the user account and with the root password. Neither worked.

One time there was a little red dot next to the mac login text field and when I hovered over it, it said that the network was unavailable or something like that.

Thanks,
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,709
7,279
I tried to log in to the Mac with the user account and with the root password. Neither worked.

One time there was a little red dot next to the mac login text field and when I hovered over it, it said that the network was unavailable or something like that.

Thanks,
Make an account in the system preferences Users & Groups panel and use that to log in at the server. Do not use Open Directory users to log in on the desktop of the server. I can't find documentation about this right now but it's always been problematic and not recommended.
 

Mork

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 9, 2009
539
34
I never used any Open Directory user ID to log into the machine, always a regular user. I created a root user using Apple's technique. But, when this issue happens, no login works.

Thanks
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,709
7,279
I never used any Open Directory user ID to log into the machine, always a regular user. I created a root user using Apple's technique. But, when this issue happens, no login works.

Thanks
Where are the home folders located?
Have you made a regular admin account, rather than root, and logged in as that? Running as root in a Mac server has led to strange behaviors at times for me, and there really is no need to do it.
 

Les Kern

macrumors 68040
Apr 26, 2002
3,063
76
Alabama
Its bound somewhere. Don't use a backup, restore the machine with the recovery disk or over the internet first.
 

D200

macrumors newbie
Nov 23, 2010
24
3
I have the same message popping up, after installing High Sierra on a mid13 iMac.

It is not a network computer. We actually rarely use it and it has been slow as hell from the very beginning...

Any way, has there been a solution to this messsge? Disk utility didn’t solve it...

Thanks!

M
 
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